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    Forget About It

    Forget About It
    Artist: Alison Krauss
    Label: Rounder / Umgd
    Category: Music

    List Price: $17.98
    Buy Used: $3.31
    You Save: $14.67 (82%)



    New (39) Used (36) Collectible (1) from $3.31

    Rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars 204 reviews
    Sales Rank: 5907

    Media: Audio CD
    Discs: 1
    Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.2
    Dimensions (in): 5.6 x 5 x 0.5

    MPN: 610465
    UPC: 011661046528
    EAN: 0011661046528
    ASIN: B00000JMCL

    Release Date: August 3, 1999
    Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days

    Tracks:

      • Stay
      • Forget About It
      • It Wouldn't Have Made Any Difference
      • Maybe
      • Empty Hearts
      • Never Got Off the Ground
      • Ghost in This House
      • It Don't Matter Now
      • That Kind of Love
      • Could You Lie
      • Dreaming My Dreams With You

    Similar Items:

      • New Favorite
      • A Hundred Miles or More: A Collection
      • Now That I've Found You: A Collection
      • So Long So Wrong
      • Lonely Runs Both Ways

    Editorial Reviews:

    Amazon.com
    When you possess a great pop voice, it's inevitable that you'll someday make a pop album, and Alison Krauss has finally made hers. Instead of bidding for radio airplay with the extravagant, extroverted pop of Shania Twain, Trisha Yearwood, or Celine Dion, Krauss has crafted an intimate, understated chamber-pop album reminiscent of Joni Mitchell's Blue or Rosanne Cash's Interiors. The material comes from such mainstream-pop writers as Michael McDonald, Todd Rundgren, Allen Reynolds, and Danny O'Keefe, but Krauss the producer gives the songs a distinctive spin. She layers the harmonies of her regular Union Station band, the Cox Family singers, pianist Matt Rollings, drummer Jim Keltner, and mandolinist Sam Bush to create a lush, hushed sound that's neither traditional bluegrass nor electric country-pop. Krauss multitracks her own fiddle parts and blends them with Jerry Douglas's Dobro to create an unorthodox string-quartet sound. In this setting her tender, translucent vocals capture that moment when a relationship is unraveling before the lovers are ready to let it go. --Geoffrey Himes


    Customer Reviews:   Read 199 more reviews...

    5 out of 5 stars Not bluegrass, not country, not pop just astounding   March 15, 2000
    Christian Bussey
    39 out of 39 found this review helpful

    I have been an Alison Krauss and Union Station fan for a long time. I bought this CD the day it came out. I fell in love with with "Stay" right from the start. It is an absolutely amazing song you can hear her soul being poured out to you as you listen and it makes your heart sag, you find your self singing along even though you don't know the words your lips try to find them. The entire album is like this. You will be dragged into the songs, the songs are visual, and very emotional. Do I miss the lack of picking bluegrass on this album, yes of course I do. Would I replace any of the songs on this album to make room for a bluegrass number...no. In my opinion this album is perfection you couldnot add or subtract a single song without destroying it as a work of art. If you remove one song you miss the entire concept of the album you miss the "whole" of it's beauty. This is not an album you should listen to a song hear and a song there...to be able to fully comprehend and sink into the beauty you have to envelope yourself for the entire album. I want to state first that this album is not depressing. One would state that happiness is the lack of sadness. How else to make yourself happy than to purge your sad emotions by letting them flow from you as you sing this beautiful music. Personally after listening to this album I felt exhausted, but emotionally cleaned.


    5 out of 5 stars A guilty pleasure   April 26, 2002
    S. Hawkins (New York, NY)
    29 out of 29 found this review helpful

    I find it odd that I would ever refer to Alison Krauss as a "guilty pleasure." So, I guess that definitely warrants an explanation. This album is unlike any of her other ones in that it strays away from her bluegrass roots and instead plants its feet more firmly in pop.

    But that's not quite right either. She doesn't "stray" as you get the distinct impression that she knows exactly what she is doing and where she wants to go. Also, no matter how poppish she may get, there are two qualities in the music that are inherently redeeming. One is that her voice is great for bluegrass, but it is unbelievable in a pop context. Second, no matter how "pop" she gets (and I mean that without a hint of sarcasm or mockery), her music retains a bluegrass feel.

    I can understand not liking this album...or at least NOT ADMITTING to liking this album. But frankly, it is gorgeous - but not in a Kenny G sense of the word. It is achingly beautiful, soulful music that is well-performed. What more could you ask for? It may be a guilty pleasure, but so is chocolate, and I'm not about to swear off either one of them.


    4 out of 5 stars AK does a Chick Disc   November 18, 2001
    Robert J. Morris (Macungie, PA USA)
    40 out of 43 found this review helpful

    Women know better than men that melancholy is an underated emotion, it's comfortable sometimes to be blue. Well next time you're kinda down play yourself this CD before you pop the Prozak.

    Krauss uses her talent as a producer to put together a fine album of sad songs; uses her talent as a singer to break a few hearts; and uses her talent with a fiddle to create the best two songs on the album: "Could You Lie", and "Never Got Off the Ground".

    You'll find the usual gang around her here, the Union Station guys, Jerry Douglas on the Dobro; with a few others added in. And they're all as reliably terrific as ever.

    An aside here: Whoever put Alison Krauss and Union Station together years ago is a genius. Her voice is the perfect instrument to bring a soul to their incredible sound. And the addition of Douglas' dobro to so much of their work over the past few years has made this group the definition of contemporary bluegrass, the reason bluegrass has gained so much in popularity recently.

    Looking up I see I've written a five star review and only given four. Well, the music and prouction are just fine, but there's just a little too much heartache here for me. Can't fault any one or two songs, they're all good. Just wish she'd thrown in a couple of upbeat tunes to lighten the load. My wife tells me that ladies are fine with eleven straight heart breaking tunes. OK, we'll call this one a chick disc.


    5 out of 5 stars When you play Nothing at All   January 5, 2000
    19 out of 19 found this review helpful

    Don't be fooled by those that try to pigeon-hole this un-pigeon-holeable artist: Krauss is one of those very rare all-in-one pros with more talent in her little finger than most of the population of Nashville combined. She's a virtuoso fiddler, producer extrodinaire, and intuitively understands that less is usually more. Being backed by a band that's just a good is the icing on the cake.

    Refreshingly unformulaic, her music stands alone. While past albums have had more pervasive "traditional" themes, "Forget About It" rests so firmly on her foundation of experience that there's something here for everyone, from the hard-core fan to the first time listener: elemental guitar and dobro licks pristine in their simplicity, thick, layered harmonies and violin, and of course, that knee-weakening voice.

    "Forget About It" has been oft-called Krauss' "Pop Album," but anyone who knows anything about her music understands that labling her in any broad way means missing the point entirely. The only thing Pop about "Forget About It" may be the well of inspiration she draws from, including writers such as pop-icons Todd Rundgren and Michael McDonald. But Krauss' arrangements have always done more than justice to their oringinal incarnations, invariably becoming works of art that stand firmly on their own. If you're a fan, you'll wear this one out just as you have all the others. If you're thinking of giving this truly talented girl a listen for the first time, prepare to be blown away.


    5 out of 5 stars Breathtaking, Relaxing, Beautiful   August 5, 2001
    J. M. Zuurbier (Canada)
    25 out of 27 found this review helpful

    Alison Krauss is a true talent. She has one of the most beautiful voices in country music, that expresses emotions, without overdoing it, or taking away from the simplistic nature of the songs. The harmonies on this album, FORGET ABOUT IT, are beautiful. The lead song "Stay" is a beautiful song with equally compelling vocals and instrumentation. This is common throughout the whole CD. "It Wouldn't Have Made Any Difference" is a sorrowful, sad track about a realization that there never was any love or commitment in the relationship, it's my favorite song on the album. "Ghost In This House" is another tragic song, but its so beautifully done with its vocals and instruments. "It Don't Matter" and "Could You Lie" are other beautiful songs, actually in fact there are no filler tracks to be found. The final track "Dreaming My Dreams With You" is a nice love song, very nice. Overall, this is an excellent album and I highly reccomend it to anyone who likes country music, true country, with a tinge of bluegrass backed with beautiful vocals and instruments. And if you're tired of the same sounding country music that a lot of artists are making out of Nashville, give this a try, you'll be surprised and find she's very much talented and doesn't get the recognition or respect she deserves.


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